Petitioner was summoned to appear as a witness before the House
Committee on Un-American Activities, which was investigating
infiltration of Communists into the steel industry. Petitioner's
counsel telegraphed the General Counsel of the Committee,
requesting that petitioner be permitted to testify in an executive
session, because that would avoid "exposing witnesses to
publicity." Without authorization, the Committee's Staff Director
replied by telegram that the request was denied. At the beginning
of the hearing several days later, petitioner's counsel tried to
have these telegrams read into the record, but this was denied, and
neither petitioner nor his counsel was permitted to discuss the
subject. Without specifying this as the reason, petitioner refused
to answer questions asked him by the Committee, and he was indicted
for violating 2 U.S.C. § 192. At the trial, petitioner
contended that the Committee had violated its Rule IV, which
provides that witnesses shall be interrogated in executive session
if a majority of the Committee believes that his public
interrogation might "endanger national security or unjustly injure
his reputation, or the reputation of other individuals," but
petitioner was convicted and sentenced to a fine and
imprisonment.
Held: On the record in this case, it appears that the
Committee violated its own Rule IV by failing to give consideration
to the question whether interrogation in public would injure
petitioner's reputation and by failing to act on his request that
he be interrogated in executive session, and petitioner's
conviction for refusal to testify in public cannot stand. Pp.
374 U. S.
110-124.
(a) The Committee's Rule IV is quite explicit in requiring that
injury to a witness' reputation be considered, along with danger to
national security and injury to the reputation of a third party, in
deciding whether to hold an executive session. Pp.
374 U. S.
114-115.
(b) Rule IV conferred upon witnesses the right to request an
executive session and the right to have the Committee act upon such
a request, according to the standards set forth in the Rule. Pp.
374 U. S.
115-117.
Page 374 U. S. 110
(c) That a witness may be questioned in public, even after an
executive session has been held, does not mean that the Committee
is freed from considering possible injury to his reputation. Pp.
374 U. S.
117-118.
(d) It appears from the record that the Committee violated its
own Rule in this case by deciding to interrogate petitioner
publicly without giving any consideration to the question whether
to do so would injure petitioner's reputation. Pp.
374 U. S.
118-119.
(e) The Committee also violated its own Rule by failing to act
upon petitioner's express request for an executive session, even
though that request was directed to the Committee's General
Counsel, instead of the Chairman. Pp.
374 U. S.
119-121.
(f) The only remedy petitioner had for this denial of his rights
under the Rule was his refusal to testify. Pp.
374 U. S.
121-122.
(g) Petitioner's rights under Rule IV were not forfeited by his
failure to make clear at the time he was questioned that his
refusal to testify was based upon the Committee's departure from
Rule IV. Pp.
374 U. S.
122-124.
287 F.2d 292 reversed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WARREN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This contempt of Congress case, stemming from investigations
conducted by the House Committee on Un-American Activities,
involves, among others, questions of whether the House Committee on
Un-American Activities failed to comply with its rules, and whether
such a failure excused petitioner's refusal to answer the
Committee's questions.
Page 374 U. S. 111
Petitioner Edward Yellin was indicted in the Northern District
of Indiana on five counts of willfully refusing to answer questions
put to him by a Subcommittee of the House Committee on Un-American
Activities (hereafter Committee) at a public hearing. He was
convicted, under 2 U.S.C. § 192, of contempt of Congress on
four counts. He was sentenced to four concurrent terms of
imprisonment, each for one year, and fined $250. The Court of
Appeals for the Seventh Circuit affirmed. 287 F.2d 292. Since the
case presented constitutional questions of continuing importance,
we granted certiorari. 368 U.S. 816. However, because of the view
we take of the Committee's action, which was at variance with its
rules, we do not reach the constitutional questions raised.
[
Footnote 1]
The factual setting is for the most part not in dispute. The
Committee was engaged, in 1958, in an investigation of so-called
colonization by the Communist Party in basic industry. One of its
inquiries focused upon the steel industry in Gary, Indiana, where
petitioner was employed. Having information that petitioner was a
Communist, the Committee decided to call Yellin and question him in
a public rather than an executive session. The Committee then
subpoenaed petitioner on January 23, 1958. His attorney, Mr.
Rabinowitz, sent a telegram to the Committee's general counsel, Mr.
Tavenner, on Thursday, February 6, 1958. The telegram asked for an
executive session because "testimony needed for legislative . . .
purposes can be secured in executive session without exposing
witnesses to publicity." Since the Committee and
Page 374 U. S. 112
Mr. Tavenner had left Washington, D.C., for Gary, the telegram
was answered by the Committee's Staff Director. His reply read:
"Reurtel (Re your telegram?) requesting executive session in
lieu of open session for Edward Yellin and Nicholas Busic. Your
request denied."
"Richard Arens Staff Director"
According to Congressman Walter, the Chairman of the Committee,
Mr. Arens did not have authority to take such action.
Petitioner's counsel also sought to bring the matter to the
Committee's attention when it commenced its public hearing the
following Monday, February 10, 1958. His efforts to have the
telegrams read into the record were cut short by Congressman
Walter. [
Footnote 2] Mr.
Rabinowitz would not have been justified in continuing, since
Committee rules permit counsel only to advise a witness, not to
engage in oral argument with the Committee. Rule
Page 374 U. S. 113
VII(B). In any event, Congressman Walter was not interested in
discussing the content of the telegrams. From his sometimes
conflicting testimony at trial, it appears he did not even know
what the telegrams said. [
Footnote
3] And though Congressman Walter said the Committee would
consider in executive session whether to make the telegrams a part
of the record, it appears that whatever
Page 374 U. S. 114
action was taken was without knowledge of the telegrams'
contents. [
Footnote 4]
It is against this background that the Committee's failure to
comply with its own rules must be judged. It has been long settled,
of course, that rules of Congress and its committees are judicially
cognizable.
Christoffel v. United States, 338 U. S.
84;
United States v. Smith, 286 U. S.
6;
United States v. Ballin, 144 U. S.
1. And a legislative committee has been held to
observance of its rules,
Christoffel v. United States,
supra, just as, more frequently, executive agencies have been.
See, e.g., Vitarelli v. Seaton, 359 U.
S. 535;
Service v. Dulles, 354 U.
S. 363.
The particular Committee Rule involved, Rule IV, provides in
part:
"IV -- Executive and Public Hearings:"
"A --
Executive:"
"(1) If a majority of the Committee or Subcommittee, duly
appointed as provided by the rules of the House of Representatives,
believes that the interrogation of a witness in a public hearing
might
Page 374 U. S. 115
endanger national security or
unjustly injure his
reputation, or the reputation of other individuals, the
Committee shall interrogate such witness in an Executive Session
for the purpose of determining the necessity or advisability of
conducting such interrogation thereafter in a public hearing."
"
* * * *"
"B --
Public Hearings:"
"(1) All other hearings shall be public."
(Emphasis added.) The rule is quite explicit in requiring that
injury to a witness' reputation be considered, along with danger to
the national security and injury to the reputation of third
parties, in deciding whether to hold an executive session.
At the threshold, we are met with the argument that Rule IV was
written to provide guidance for the Committee alone, and that it
was not designed to confer upon witnesses the right to request an
executive session and the right to have the Committee act, either
upon that request or on its own, according to the standards set
forth in the rule. It seems clear, from the structure of the
Committee's rules and from the Committee's practice, that such is
not the case.
The rules are few in number, and brief -- all 17 take little
more than six pages in the record. Yet, throughout the rules, the
dominant theme is definition of the witness' rights and privileges.
Rule II requires that the subject of any investigation be
announced, and that information sought be "relevant and germane to
the subject." Rule III requires that witnesses be subpoenaed "a
reasonably sufficient time in advance" to allow them a chance to
prepare and employ counsel. Rule VI makes available to any witness
a transcript of his testimony -- though at his expense. Rule VII
gives every witness the privilege of having counsel advise him
during the hearing. Rule VIII gives a witness a reasonable time to
get other counsel
Page 374 U. S. 116
if his original counsel is removed for failure to comply with
the rules. Rule X makes detailed provision for those persons who
have been named as subversive, Fascist, Communist, etc., by another
witness. Such persons are given an opportunity to present rebuttal
testimony, and are to be "accorded the same privileges as any other
witness appearing before the Committee." Rule XIII permits any
witness to keep out of the range of television cameras. Finally,
Rule XVII requires that each witness "shall be furnished" a copy of
the rules. All these work for the witness' benefit. They show that
the Committee has, in a number of instances, intended to assure a
witness fair treatment,
viz., the right to advice of
counsel, or protection from undue publicity,
viz., the
right not to be photographed by television cameras. Rule IV, in
providing for an executive session when a public hearing might
unjustly injure a witness' reputation, has the same protective
import. And, if it is the witness who is being protected, the most
logical person to have the right to enforce those protections is
the witness himself.
The Committee's practice reinforces this conclusion. Congressman
Walter testified that the Committee "always" gave due consideration
to requests for executive sessions. [
Footnote 5] Weight should be given such a practice of
Page 374 U. S. 117
the Committee in construing its rules,
United States v.
Smith, 286 U. S. 6,
286 U. S. 33.
That the Committee has entertained, and always does entertain,
requests for executive sessions reinforces the conclusion that the
Committee intended in Rule IV to give the individual witness a
right to some consideration of his efforts to protect his
reputation.
It must be acknowledged, of course, that Rule IV does not
provide complete protection. The Committee may not be required by
its rules to avoid even unjust injury to a witness' reputation.
Assuming that the Committee decides to hold an executive session,
the Committee need do so only "for the purpose of determining the
necessity or advisability of conducting such interrogation
thereafter in a public hearing." (Emphasis added.) By inclusion of
the word "necessity," the rule may contemplate cases in which the
Committee will proceed in a public hearing despite the risk, or
even probability, of injury to the witness' reputation. [
Footnote 6]
Page 374 U. S. 118
That petitioner may be questioned in public, even after an
executive session has been held, does not mean, however, that the
Committee is freed from considering possible injury to his
reputation. The Committee has at least undertaken to consider a
witness' reputation and the efforts a witness makes to protect it,
even though the Committee may, in its discretion, nevertheless
decide thereafter to hold a public hearing. The Committee failed in
two respects to carry out that undertaking in Yellin's case.
First, it does not appear from Congressman Walter's testimony
that the Committee considered injury to the witness' reputation
when it decided against calling Yellin in executive session:
"Q. [By Mr. RABINOWITZ]: The Committee does sometimes hold
executive sessions, doesn't it?"
"A. [By Congressman WALTER]: Yes."
"Q. And what are the considerations which the Committee uses in
determining whether to hold executive sessions?"
"A. This is usually done when the Committee is fearful lest a
witness will mention the name of somebody against whom there is no
sworn testimony, and in order to prevent the name of somebody being
mentioned in public that we are not sure has been active in the
conspiracy -- at least that there isn't sworn testimony to that
effect -- we have an executive hearing. "
Page 374 U. S. 119
"Q. Are those the only circumstances under which executive
hearings are held?"
"A.
I don't know of any other, except that where we are
fearful that testimony might be adduced that could be harmful to
the national defense. We are not so sure about the testimony of any
of the witnesses."
(Emphasis added.) By Congressman Walter's own admission, the
Committee holds executive sessions in only two of the three
instances specified in Rule IV,
i.e., when there may be
injury to the reputation of a third party or injury to the national
security. Injury to the witness himself is not a factor.
Consequently the initial Committee decision to question Yellin
publicly, made before serving him with a subpoena, was made without
following Rule IV.
Secondly, the Committee failed to act upon petitioner's express
request for an executive session. [
Footnote 7] The Staff Director, who lacked the authority
to do so, acted in the Committee's stead. That petitioner addressed
his request to the Committee's counsel does not alter the case. The
Committee did not specify in Rule IV to whom such requests
Page 374 U. S. 120
should be addressed. But, from other rules, it may be inferred
that the general counsel is an appropriate addressee. In Rule IX,
the Committee permits witnesses to file prepared or written
statements for the record. The statements are to be sent to the
"counsel of the Committee." Rule X makes provision for third
parties who have been named as subversive, Fascist, Communist,
etc., in a public hearing. A person, notified of having been named,
who feels that his reputation has been adversely affected is
directed to "[c]ommunicate with the counsel of the Committee." As a
footnote to that rule, the Committee has said: "All witnesses are
invited at any time to confer with Committee counsel or
investigators for the Committee prior to hearings." Also, it should
be noted that the Staff Director's telegraphed response had the
misleading appearance of authority and finality. The Chairman of
the Committee should not now be allowed to say that, had petitioner
disregarded the response he received from the Chairman's staff, and
instead renewed his request to the Chairman, "this could not have
happened" -- especially when petitioner's counsel tried to bring
the matter to the attention of the Committee, and was brusquely cut
off.
Thus, in two instances, the Committee failed to exercise its
discretion according to the standards which Yellin had a right to
have considered. His position is similar to that of the petitioner
in
United States ex rel. Accardi v. Shaughnessy,
347 U. S. 260.
Accardi had been ordered deported. Concededly the order was valid.
However, Accardi applied to the Board of Immigration Appeals for
suspension of the order. This, in the discretion of the Attorney
General, was permitted by § 19(c) of the Immigration Act of
1917, 39 Stat. 889, as amended, 8 U.S.C. (1946 ed., Supp. V) §
155(c). (The successor to that section in the 1952 Act is §
244, 66 Stat. 214, 8 U.S.C.
Page 374 U. S. 121
§ 1254.) The Attorney General had, by regulation, permitted
the Board of Immigration Appeals to make final decisions upon
applications for this discretionary relief, subject to certain
exceptions not involved in Accardi's case. Shortly before
petitioner appealed to the Board, the Attorney General published a
list of "unsavory characters," including petitioner, who were to be
deported. Accardi claimed that, since the Board knew he was on the
list, it did not exercise the full discretion the Attorney General
had delegated to it. Its decision was predetermined.
This Court held that the Board had failed to exercise its
discretion, though required to do so by the Attorney General's
regulations. Although the Court recognized that Accardi might well
lose even if the Board ignored the Attorney General's list of
unsavory characters, it nonetheless held that Accardi should at
least have the chance given him by the regulations.
The same result should obtain in the case at bar. Yellin might
not prevail, even if the Committee takes note of the risk of injury
to his reputation or his request for an executive session. But he
is at least entitled to have the Committee follow its rules and
give him consideration according to the standards it has adopted in
Rule IV.
At that point, however, the similarity to Accardi's case ends.
Petitioner has no traditional remedy, such as the writ of habeas
corpus upon which Accardi relied, by which to redress the loss of
its rights. If the Committee ignores his request for an executive
session, it is highly improbable that petitioner could obtain an
injunction against the Committee that would protect him from public
exposure.
See Pauling v. Eastland, 109 U.S.App.D.C. 342,
288 F.2d 126,
cert. denied, 364 U.S. 900. Nor is there an
administrative remedy for petitioner to pursue should
Page 374 U. S. 122
the Committee fail to consider the risk of injury to his
reputation. To answer the questions put to him publicly and then
seek redress is no answer. For one thing, his testimony will cause
the injury he seeks to avoid; under pain of perjury, he cannot by
artful dissimulation evade revealing the information he wishes to
remain confidential. For another, he has no opportunity to recover
in damages, U.S.Const., Art. I, § 6;
Kilbourn v.
Thompson, 103 U. S. 168,
103 U. S.
201-205.
Cf. Tenney v. Brandhove, 341 U.
S. 367,
341 U. S. 377.
Even the Fifth Amendment is not sufficient protection, since
petitioner could say many things which would discredit him without
subjecting himself to the risk of criminal prosecution. The only
avenue open is that which petitioner actually took. He refused to
testify.
As a last obstacle, however, the Government argues that Yellin's
rights were forfeited by his failure to make clear at the time he
was questioned that his refusal to testify was based upon the
Committee's departure from Rule IV. Whatever the merits of the
argument might be when immediately apparent deviations from
Committee rules are involved, [
Footnote 8] it has no application here. Yellin was unable,
at the time of his hearing, to tell from the actions of the
Committee that his rights had been violated. So far as Yellin knew,
the Staff Director acted as Congressman
Page 374 U. S. 123
Walter's agent, announcing the results of the Committee's
deliberations. And, so far as he knew, the Committee, when it
initially decided to hold a public hearing, did so in accordance
with Rule IV. It was not until petitioner's trial, when his
attorney for the first time had an opportunity for searching
examination, that it became apparent the Committee was violating
its rules.
It may be assumed that, if petitioner had expressly rested his
refusal to answer upon a violation of Rule IV and the Committee
nevertheless proceeded, he would be entitled to acquittal, were he
able to prove his defense. Otherwise, if Yellin could be convicted
of contempt of Congress notwithstanding the violation of Rule IV,
he would be deprived of the only remedy he has for protecting his
reputation. Certainly the rights created by the Committee's rules
cannot be that illusory.
Of course, should Yellin have refused to answer in the mistaken
but good faith belief that his rights had been violated, his
mistake of law would be no defense.
Watkins v. United
States, 354 U. S. 178,
354 U. S. 208;
Sinclair v. United States, 279 U.
S. 263,
279 U. S. 299.
But he would at least be entitled to submit the correctness of his
belief to a court of law.
Yellin should be permitted the same opportunity for judicial
review when he discovers at trial that his rights have been
violated. This is especially so when the Committee's practice leads
witnesses to misplaced reliance upon its rules. When reading a copy
of the Committee's rules, which must be distributed to every
witness under Rule XVII, the witness' reasonable expectation is
that the Committee actually does what it purports to do, adhere to
its own rules. To foreclose a defense based upon those rules,
simply because the witness was deceived by the Committee's
appearance of regularity, is not fair.
Page 374 U. S. 124
The Committee prepared the groundwork for prosecution in
Yellin's case meticulously. It is not too exacting to require that
the Committee be equally meticulous in obeying its own rules.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
The constitutional questions upon which we need not pass are
whether the Committee's investigation infringed upon petitioner's
rights under the First Amendment and whether petitioner was
convicted under an unconstitutionally vague statute. In addition,
we do not discuss petitioner's contention that the trial judge
erred in excluding expert testimony about the factors which should
be considered in determining petitioner's rights under the First
Amendment.
[
Footnote 2]
The Committee's General Counsel had asked Mr. Yellin a few
preliminary questions when Mr. Rabinowitz interrupted.
"Mr. RABINOWITZ. Mr. Counsel [Mr. Tavenner], I wonder whether it
would be possible to read into the record the exchange of telegrams
between myself and the committee in connection with the witness's
testimony. I would like to have it appear in the record."
"The CHAIRMAN. We will decide whether it will be made a part of
the record when the executive session is held. Go ahead."
"Mr. RABINOWITZ. Mr. Chairman, I sent the telegrams because I
wanted them to appear. I do not care whether they appear publicly
or not. I do want it to appear that that exchange of telegrams
occurred. I did not do it just to increase the revenue of the
telegram company."
"The CHAIRMAN. Well, whatever the reason was, whether it has
been stated or otherwise, it will be considered in executive
session."
"Mr. RABINOWITZ. May I state --"
"The CHAIRMAN. Do not bother. You know the privileges given you
by this committee. You have appeared before it often enough. You
know as well as anybody. Go ahead, Mr. Tavenner."
[
Footnote 3]
Consider, for example, the following testimony of Congressman
Walter:
"Q. [By Mr. RABINOWITZ]: So that, at the time I raised at this
hearing the question of the telegrams, you didn't know anything
about any telegrams, and you weren't sufficiently interested to
find out what I was talking about; is that right?"
"A. [By Congressman WALTER]: Well, not exactly that, Mr.
Rabinowitz. I was interested in knowing. I knew that you made an
application for an executive session."
"Q. How did you know that?"
"A. Well, the telegram; at least, that's what you started to
talk about."
"Q. You knew it at the time of the hearing?"
"A. No. Isn't that what you started to talk about?"
"Q. When did you first learn that I had made an application for
an executive session?"
"A.
I believe today. I never had seen these telegrams,
actually. I heard you mention them, at least; now my recollection
is that I heard you mention them,
but I haven't seen them until
this minute."
(Emphasis added).
See also the following testimony:
"Q. [By Mr. RABINOWITZ]: Well, weren't you interested in finding
out what I was talking about?"
"A. [By Congressman WALTER]: I knew what you were talking about.
You were talking about a telegram that you say you sent, and it was
too late then to raise any question that might have been raised by
the telegram."
Later, Congressman Walter said:
"I think the impression I got was that these were telegrams that
were more or less in the nature of a request to postpone, without
grounds, or whatever it was that Mr. Tavenner told me and the other
members of the Committee, and I think that we were just not
impressed by it."
[
Footnote 4]
The following occurred during Mr. Rabinowitz' direct examination
of Congressman Walter:
"Q. Well, did you, or did you not, take it up in executive
session as you said you would?"
"A. I am not clear; I think that we probably did talk about
making it a part of the record, and I think the conclusion was
reached that it was not properly a part of the record already
made."
"Q. Didn't you testify, Congressman, just a few minutes ago,
while you were on the stand, that the first you knew about the
contents of the telegram was just now, when you got on the witness
stand?"
"A. That's right."
"Q. So you discussed this whole matter in executive session
after the Gary hearings, without even knowing what the telegrams
said?"
"A. That's about it."
"Q. And you reached the conclusion not to make them a part of
the record without even knowing what was in them?"
"A. That's right. . . ."
[
Footnote 5]
Mr. Rabinowitz asked Congressman Walter:
"But it wasn't worth the chance of calling him in executive
session, to see what his position would have been?"
"A. I am sure that, had you communicated this whole matter to
the Committee before we left Washington, so that we could have
given it due consideration --
we would have, and always do
-- we might have a different situation today."
(Emphasis added.)
Congressman Walter also said he was "sure this could not have
happened, had you [Mr. Rabinowitz] addressed your telegram to
me."
Note also the following question by Mr. Rabinowitz and answer by
Mr. Tavenner:
"Q. And does that rule [Rule IV] operate ever for the protection
of a witness who is called?"
"A. Certainly."
[
Footnote 6]
Although, for reasons to be developed later, it does not appear
that the Committee was following Rule IV in Yellin's case, it seems
clear that the Committee realized its public interrogation of
Yellin would injure his reputation. Congressman Walter testified,
for example, that:
"A. . . . [T]he Committee already passed on the question of
whether or not we would hear Mr. Yellin at a session when the
purpose of calling him was discussed, and it was decided then that
the rule with respect to an executive session was not applicable
because the investigator -- and I might say it was Mr. Collins, a
former FBI agent, who developed this entire matter, and we were
willing to accept his story with respect to the proposed
testimony."
"Q. And what was his story?"
"A. Well, his story was that the man was a known Communist; that
he had been active in the international conspiracy, and that he had
deceived his employer; and, furthermore, he came within the
category of those people that we were experiencing a great deal of
difficulty in finding out about with respect to the
colonization."
Mr. Tavenner also said he would not have recommended to the
Committee that Yellin be heard in executive session "[b]ecause we
knew that he was a member of the Communist Party, and he was in a
position to give the Committee information, if he wanted to."
From the Committee's knowledge, whether it be reliable or not,
the Committee could only have concluded that Yellin's reputation
would suffer. Yet Congressman Walter said this was the kind of case
in which a public hearing was appropriate.
[
Footnote 7]
Any suggestion that petitioner's request was untimely cannot be
accepted. For one thing, only 14 days intervened between service of
the subpoena upon petitioner and delivery of his request to the
Committee's offices in Washington. Also, it is of some significance
that the Committee did not hold another witness at the Gary
hearings, one Joseph Gyurko, to the strict standard of timeliness
now urged. Gyurko had sent a telegram to the Committee's offices in
Washington about noon on Saturday, February 8, 1958. When Gyurko
was called on Tuesday, February 11, he was given an executive
hearing even though Congressman Walter expressed the opinion that
Gyurko had deliberately waited until after business hours on
Saturday to send his request. Since the Committee did not
evenhandedly deny executive sessions to all who made such eleventh
hour requests, it is not in a fair position to plead the
untimeliness of Yellin's request.
[
Footnote 8]
Although, as a matter of due process, a witness is entitled to
an explanation of the pertinency of a question, if he asks for it,
it appears he may lose that right if he fails to make a timely
objection.
See Deutch v. United States, 367 U.
S. 456,
367 U. S.
468-469;
Barenblatt v. United States,
360 U. S. 109,
360 U. S.
123-124;
Watkins v. United States, 354 U.
S. 178,
354 U. S.
214-215.
For other instances in which a witness' defense has been
rejected because he failed to make timely objection,
see
McPhaul v. United States, 364 U. S. 372,
364 U. S. 379;
United States v. Bryan, 339 U. S. 323,
339 U. S.
332-333;
Hartman v. United States, 290 F.2d
460, 467.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, with whom MR. JUSTICE CLARK, MR. JUSTICE
HARLAN and MR. JUSTICE STEWART join, dissenting.
Petitioner stands convicted of having refused, in violation of 2
U.S.C. § 192, [
Footnote 2/1]
to answer four questions asked him by the Committee on Un-American
Activities of the House of Representatives. He was sentenced to one
year on each count, the sentences to run concurrently, and a fine
of $250. The Court of Appeals affirmed unanimously, 287 F.2d
292.
Pursuant to House of Representatives Rules XI [
Footnote 2/2] and
Page 374 U. S. 125
XII, [
Footnote 2/3] the
Committee resolved that hearings would be held in Gary, Indiana, to
inquire into Communist Party activities in basic industry.
[
Footnote 2/4] Petitioner was
subpoenaed to appear before the Committee in Gary on February 10,
1958. Four days prior to the hearing, petitioner's counsel
Page 374 U. S. 126
sent a telegram to the Committee's counsel requesting that
petitioner be questioned in executive session in lieu of an open
session. The Staff Director of the Committee responded the same
day, and denied the request.
Petitioner appeared on the appointed date with counsel. The
Committee Chairman began the proceedings by reading the
above-quoted resolution and by stating further the purposes of the
inquiry. [
Footnote 2/5] The first
witness, an organizer
Page 374 U. S. 127
and high official in the Communist Party from 1930 to 1950,
testified that the Party had begun a policy of infiltrating into
basic industry, that Party "colonizers" were sent to coordinate
Party work in these industries, including the steel industry, and
that these colonizers were mainly young men from colleges and
universities. These colonizers, he continued, would misrepresent
their backgrounds in applying for jobs and would conceal their
educational qualifications so as to gain jobs alongside other
less-educated workers without casting suspicion on their
motives.
Page 374 U. S. 128
Petitioner, who had been present for all of the foregoing, was
called as the second witness immediately thereafter. After
answering preliminary questions as to his name and address, and
after his counsel requested that the exchange of telegrams
concerning the executive session be made part of the record,
petitioner was asked the following question:
"Mr. Yellin, where did you reside prior to September 1957?"
(Count 1.) After conferring with counsel, petitioner refused to
answer the question. He cited decisions of this Court in
Watkins v. United States, 354 U.
S. 178;
Sweezy v. New Hampshire, 354 U.
S. 234, and asserted that a congressional committee
cannot investigate into areas protected by the First Amendment and
into areas of personal belief and conscience, that the authorizing
rule of the House of Representatives was unduly vague resulting in
a denial of due process of law, and that the questions he would
answer would only be those pertinent to some legislation. He
specifically disclaimed reliance on the privilege against
self-incrimination. To indicate the pertinency of the question, the
Committee's counsel stated that, in order to learn anything from
petitioner regarding Communist Party activities in the Gary area,
it was necessary to know whether he was there over a period of
time. When directed to answer the question after this statement,
the petitioner again refused on the grounds above stated.
Petitioner was then asked to state his formal education and
whether he was a student at the College of the City of New York,
which he refused to do, and, when directed to answer, added:
"Mr. Tavenner, I will refuse to answer that question under the
grounds already stated; but it just occurs to me that, if the
committee knows all these things, I can't see the purpose or
the
Page 374 U. S. 129
pertinency of asking me what they consider a known fact.
Furthermore, it kind of appears to me as if this line of
questioning is merely trying to create an impression and expose me
for the sake of merely exposing me, and not leading to any valid
legislative purpose."
The Committee Chairman, in response, stated:
"I will assure you that that is farthest from the intention of
anybody on this committee, and this committee has never, for the
mere sake of exposing, asked a question."
The Committee thereupon received in evidence copies of
petitioner's college records showing that he transferred from the
College of the City of New York to the University of Michigan in
1948, and that he had applied for employment in a Gary steel mill
on June 23, 1949. After continued unproductive questioning,
petitioner was asked:
"Will you tell the committee, please, whether or not incidents
came to your attention of the colonization of the steel unions in
Gary by the Communist Party at any time prior to September
1957?"
(Count 2.) Following another refusal to answer, the Committee's
counsel undertook to explain the purpose of the question. [
Footnote 2/6]
Page 374 U. S. 130
Again petitioner declined to reply for the reasons he had given.
In a similar vein, he refused to answer a good many other
questions, including the following two:
"Were you a member of the Communist Party on the 23d day of
June, 1949, which is the date of application filed in your name for
employment in Gary?"
(Count 3.)
"Will you tell the committee whether or not, in 1957, there were
present in any of the steel unions at Gary, Indiana, persons who
were known to you to have been colonizers of the Communist
Party?"
(Count 4.)
Petitioner was excused, and various other witnesses were called,
among them Joseph E. LaFleur, who joined and had been active in the
Communist Party from 1942 to 1952 at the request of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation and who worked in the steel mills in Gary
at times pertinent to this inquiry. He identified petitioner as a
member of the Communist Party who, with other young men,
participated in organizing Communist Party activities in Gary.
Upon report and recommendation by the Committee, petitioner was
cited for contempt by the House of Representatives, and was
indicted and tried for refusing to answer the four questions
designated above by count numbers. The sole government witness at
the trial was the Committee's counsel, who testified that the
purpose of the hearings was to find out how serious the Communist
propaganda infiltration was in basic industry, particularly in the
steel industry. The Committee wanted information on this subject,
he stated, to decide whether to
Page 374 U. S. 131
amend various Acts of Congress, and, in fact, members of the
Committee did introduce several bills around the time of these
hearings. [
Footnote 2/7] Prior to
calling petitioner, he continued, the Committee had information
that petitioner was a member of the Communist Party while at the
University of Michigan, that he had applied for employment in Gary
without disclosing his college education, and that he had been
employed in the steel industry in Gary.
The Committee Counsel emphasized that petitioner was summoned
with the hope that he would cooperate, and that the Committee
believed petitioner had information about the colonization
activities which had not been presented by any of the other
witnesses.
"We know nothing about the actual activities of the Communist
Party in the steel plants in Indiana as of the time of this
hearing, or shortly before Mr. LaFleur, who did testify [at the
Gary hearings], according to my recollection, got out of the
Communist Party in 1950. This witness, Mr. Yellin, as to whom we
had testimony by several people, had been a member of the Communist
Party at Michigan University, and had left there and come down and
taken employment in Gary. [
Footnote
2/8] "
Page 374 U. S. 132
With respect to the denial of the request for an executive
hearing, Committee Counsel testified as follows:
"Q. [By Mr. Rabinowitz.] Then why did you not comply with the
request for an executive session?"
"A. [By Committee Counsel.] . . . With the information that the
Committee had regarding his membership, I would not have
recommended -- I will say this -- I would not have recommended to
the Committee, if they had asked, that he be heard in executive
session."
"Q. Why not?"
"A. Because we knew that he was a member of the Communist Party,
and he was in a position to give the Committee information, if he
wanted to."
"Q. You knew he had been a member of the Communist Party?"
"A. Yes. "
Page 374 U. S. 133
"Q. Many years before?"
"A. Yes."
"Q. You didn't know whether he still was?"
"A. If you had come and told me, now, this man has considerable
information that he wants to give, that involves other people, and
it ought to be thoroughly investigated before being made public, I
would certainly have recommended that he be heard in executive
session, but you never indicated that he was willing to do
anything."
"Q. I did indicate that he wanted an executive session, though,
didn't I?"
"Q. I say in the way of giving testimony."
"Q. And you did not feel that it was advisable to call an
executive session for the purpose of determining whether he was
prepared to give testimony, or not?"
"A. My recollection is that he was sworn in as a witness, and
you were sitting by his side, and, at the beginning of the
testimony, you asked that we make a part of the record the
telegrams which you had sent to the Committee. You didn't offer any
suggestion then that he would give any information that would be of
such a character that it ought to be taken in executive session to
protect anybody while we were investigating to see whether the
witness was telling the truth, or not."
Representative Walter of Pennsylvania, the Chairman of the House
Un-American Activities Committee and of the Subcommittee which
conducted the hearings in Gary, was called by petitioner. As far as
he could recall, he did not know of petitioner's telegram asking
for an executive session until the opening of the hearing in Gary.
He pointed out that the telegram was not addressed to him, and he
had already departed for Gary when the telegram arrived. He stated
that neither the Committee Counsel
Page 374 U. S. 134
nor the Staff Director had authority to pass on a request for an
executive session, and that, when the matter of the telegram was
raised at the hearings, "it was too late then to raise any question
that might have been raised by the telegram." When asked to
explain, he said:
"Well, the Committee already passed on the question of whether
or not we would hear Mr. Yellin at a session when the purpose of
calling him was discussed, and it was decided then that the rule
with respect to an executive session was not applicable, because
the investigator -- and I might say it was Mr. Collins, a former
FBI agent, who developed this entire matter, and we were willing to
accept his story with respect to the proposed testimony."
Mr. Collins' story, according to Chairman Walter, was
"that the man was a known Communist; that he had been active in
the international conspiracy, and that he had deceived his
employer; and, furthermore, he came within the category of those
people that we were experiencing a great deal of difficulty in
finding out about with respect to the colonization."
Congressman Walter further testified that petitioner's counsel
at the hearing in Gary "didn't even there inform me as to the
contends of the telegrams," which had not been sent to him, and
also acknowledged that he had interrupted petitioner's counsel,
since
"it is not the practice of the Committee to hear counsel, and
that the function of counsel at Committee hearings is solely to
confer with witnesses."
When asked to state the considerations which the Committee uses
in determining whether to hold executive sessions, Chairman Walter
explained:
"This is usually done when the Committee is fearful lest a
witness will mention the name of somebody against whom there is no
sworn testimony, and in order to prevent the name of somebody being
mentioned in public that we are not sure has been active in the
conspiracy, at least that there isn't sworn testimony to that
effect, we have an executive
Page 374 U. S. 135
hearing."
He was aware that many witnesses refused to testify, but
"it is always worth a chance that somebody will testify . . .
occasionally we are very pleasantly surprised at having somebody
give us information that is of great value in the drafting of
legislation."
Petitioner's challenge to his conviction is predicated upon,
among other matters, [
Footnote 2/9]
the claim that, by the rules of the Committee, he was improperly
denied an executive session, or, at the very least, a good faith
consideration of his request for one.
I
Since petitioner did not refuse to testify at the hearing on the
ground that it was a public, rather than a private, session, it is
my view that he is not entitled, at this late stage, to rely upon
the Committee's alleged failure to apply its executive session rule
to him.
As the courts have repeatedly held, to be available as a defense
in a contempt of Congress trial, an objection must have been relied
upon and asserted before the congressional committee.
United
States v. Bryan, 339 U. S. 323,
339 U. S.
332-333;
United States v. Fleischman,
339 U. S. 349,
Page 374 U. S. 136
339 U. S. 352;
Barenblatt v. United States, 360 U.
S. 109,
360 U. S.
123-125;
McPhaul v. United States, 364 U.
S. 372;
Eisler v. United States, 83
U.S.App.D.C. 315, 170 F.2d 273;
Hartman v. United States,
290 F.2d 460 (C.A.9th Cir.);
United States v.
Kamin, 136 F.
Supp. 791. This is no technical quibble, for there are
compelling reasons to require an objection to be pursued before the
Committee. It serves the administration of justice to have
objections seasonably made in order that asserted errors may be
corrected at the earliest possible time. As is the case in
proceedings before a trial court, 1 Wigmore (3d ed. 1940) § 18
at 322, the objecting party is required to state his position and
afford an opportunity to act upon his claim.
"The practice of withholding all objection until time of trial
is not helpful in protecting a witness' right to a valid [hearing].
It prevents correction of any error in that respect and profits
only the witness who seeks a concealed defect to exploit."
United States v. Bryan, supra, at
339 U. S. 344
(concurring opinion). Accordingly, if possible damage to
petitioner's reputation was a ground for his demanding an executive
session under the Committee's rules and for his refusal to answer
questions put to him by the Committee,
"a decent respect for the House of Representatives . . . would
have required that [he] state [his] reasons. . . . To deny the
Committee the opportunity to consider the objection or remedy it
is, in itself, a contempt of its authority and an obstruction of
its processes."
Id. at
339 U. S.
332-333.
There is certainly nothing in petitioner's telegram [
Footnote 2/10] which makes out a
substantial demand for an executive session. It contains simply the
request itself and the unsupported
Page 374 U. S. 137
conclusion of petitioner's counsel, who, without knowing the
extent or direction of the investigation, insists that petitioner's
questioning could as well be conducted in executive session. There
is no mention of the Committee rule or the particular grounds upon
which the request was founded, nor are there any factual assertions
to bring to light considerations which under the rule would call
for the executive session, such as facts showing potential damage
to his reputation. Indeed, it is difficult to understand how
petitioner at the time of the request, could have anticipated any
ground for an executive session under the rule, since he had no way
of knowing what questions would be asked of him. It was not at all
unlikely that petitioner would be called, like any other employee
working in the steel mills at that time irrespective of Communist
Party affiliation, to relate what instances of infiltration he
observed while at work.
See Question,
ante, p.
374 U. S. 129.
Moreover, the wire was directed to one without authority to grant
or deny an executive session, and was sent only four days prior to
the hearings, and after the Subcommittee had departed for Gary.
At the opening of the hearing, Chairman Walter was entirely
unfamiliar with the contents of the wire. And the exchange which
occurred at that time, set out in the margin, [
Footnote 2/11] can hardly be construed as a denial
of a pointed
Page 374 U. S. 138
request for an executive session based upon possible injury to
Yellin's reputation. To be sure, Chairman Walter cut off
petitioner's counsel immediately, but, in terminating the
discussion with counsel, the Chairman was simply making it clear
that counsel's function before the Committee was to confer with the
witness, and not to argue with the Committee, which is in
accordance with the Committee's rules. It was for the witness, with
the help of his attorney, to answer the questions or to state his
grounds for refusing to do so. The Chairman in no way indicated
that the witness could not take up where counsel had left off.
Page 374 U. S. 139
As the immediately ensuing questioning reveals, [
Footnote 2/12] petitioner had every
opportunity to state his reasons for refusing to answer and every
opportunity to confer with counsel. But the grounds which
petitioner then gave for not answering the Committee's questions
were based principally upon the First Amendment, and were not
grounded upon Rule IV-A, upon an alleged right to testify
Page 374 U. S. 140
in private, rather than in public, or upon injury to his
reputation.
More than once during the hearing, the Committee took particular
pains to ascertain the precise grounds upon which petitioner was
refusing to testify. And on more than one occasion, petitioner
expanded and enlarged upon his reasons for not answering the
Committee's questions. At no time, however, did he mention Rule
IV-A or the matter of an executive session, or specify how his
reputation might be injured in a public hearing. Quite the
contrary, when petitioner at one point asserted that he could
not
"see the purpose or the pertinency of asking me what they
consider a known fact . . . it kind of appears to me as if this
line of questioning is merely trying to create an impression and
expose me for the sake of merely exposing me, and not leading to
any valid legislative purpose,"
Chairman Walter assured him that the Committee had never asked
questions for the mere sake of exposing, and then inquired: "And
now I would like to ask you: what do you mean by exposing you?
Exposing you to what?" Petitioner's answer was entirely
unresponsive. He did not explain how he would be exposed or
injured, and instead launched upon a discussion of academic
freedom. At another point, when petitioner said: "I don't like to
have my loyalty questioned or my character questioned," Chairman
Walter said:
"Isn't this the best place to clarify the atmosphere? If you
feel as you say you do, and I am sure that you do, is this not a
great opportunity to eliminate whatever question might be in
anybody's mind, particularly mine, about your activities?"
Petitioner's answer was to decline to discuss himself. He did
not accept the invitation to say how or in what manner his
reputation would be unjustly injured by testifying in public.
Even if there could be sifted from this record a
bona
fide assertion of a right to an executive session and a
refusal
Page 374 U. S. 141
to answer based upon that ground, petitioner consistently relied
upon other grounds as well, and it would sweep away much
established law in this Court to give his claim to an executive
session any practical significance. Petitioner's central thesis and
repeated reasons for not responding to questions put to him by the
Committee were based upon the First Amendment. These grounds were
firmly and clearly put, and petitioner in no way indicated that an
executive session would have made any difference in his willingness
to answer questions.
The Court considered a similar situation in
United States v.
Bryan, 339 U. S. 323, in
connection with the same congressional committee. There, the
witness at her trial for contempt asserted that her failure to
produce records at the hearing was excusable because there was not
a quorum present, but that ground was held unavailable because she
had relied upon other grounds at the hearing.
"Testimonial compulsion is an intensely practical matter. . . .
[T]he fact that the alleged defect upon which respondent now
insists is, in her own estimation, an immaterial one is clearly
shown by her reliance before the Committee upon other grounds for
failing to produce the records. She does not deny, and the
transcript of the hearing makes it perfectly clear, that she would
not have complied with the subpoenas no matter how the Committee
had been constituted at the time."
Explaining an analogous case,
Hale v. Henkel,
201 U. S. 43, the
Bryan Court noted that the witness in
Hale,
"having refused compliance for other reasons which the lower
court could not remedy . . . , could not later complain of its
refusal to do a meaningless act -- to grant him additional time to
gather papers which he had indicated he would not produce in any
event. Here, respondent [Bryan] would have the Committee go through
the empty formality of summoning a quorum of its members to gather
in solemn conclave to hear her refuse to
Page 374 U. S. 142
honor its demands."
United States v. Bryan, supra, 339 U.S. at
339 U. S. 334.
[
Footnote 2/13]
Petitioner was represented at the hearing before the Committee
by experienced counsel, the same counsel who represented the
witness in the
Bryan case. It is difficult to believe
that, if petitioner was in fact refusing to answer because he was
called at a public hearing instead of an executive session, express
reliance upon the Committee rule would not appear in the record
along with the supporting reasons. Rather, it is far more likely
that petitioner preferred to include among his several reasons for
refusing to answer the ground that the Committee was seeking only
to expose him for exposure's sake.
See Watkins v. United
States, 354 U. S. 178,
354 U. S. 187,
354 U. S. 200;
Sweezy v. New Hampshire, 354 U. S. 234;
NAACP v. Alabama, 357 U. S. 449. It
would have weakened, if not destroyed, that ground if petitioner
based his refusal to testify on the executive session ground, and
had been granted a private hearing. Quite plainly petitioner was
seeking to keep his constitutional grounds intact.
It is no answer to say that this rule of diligence can be
relaxed here because petitioner was not aware until the trial that
the Committee might have ignored its own rules in deliberating upon
whether or not to question him in private. The point is that, if
petitioner has any standing to complain about the manner in which
the Committee acted, it must be because he asserted at the
Committee hearing, when matters were still open to direct
explanation and correction, that he would suffer unjust damage
to
Page 374 U. S. 143
his reputation by a public session, and that he had a right
under the rules of the Committee to have his reputational interest
considered.
Compare Watkins v. United States, 354 U.
S. 178, and
Sweezy v. New Hampshire,
354 U. S. 234,
where the specific grounds sustained by the Court were vigorously
asserted at the hearing. The Committee is obliged to make clear the
demands which it makes upon the witness.
Quinn v. United
States, 349 U. S. 155.
There surely must be a reciprocal obligation on the part of the
witness to advise the Committee of the precise grounds for his
silence.
II
In any event, however, the Committee did not, as petitioner
contends, fail to apply its executive session rule to him.
Article I, § 5, cl. 2, of the Constitution provides that
"Each House may determine the Rules of its Proceedings." The role
that the courts play in adjudicating questions involving the rules
of either house must of necessity be a limited one, for the manner
in which a house or committee of Congress chooses to run its
business ordinarily raises no justiciable controversy.
Field v.
Clark, 143 U. S. 649;
United States v. Ballin, 144 U. S. 1;
Leser v. Garnett, 258 U. S. 130,
258 U. S. 137;
cf. Flint v. Stone Tracy Co., 220 U.
S. 107,
220 U. S. 143.
However, when the application or construction of a rule directly
affects persons other than members of the house, "the question
presented is of necessity a judicial one."
United States v.
Smith, 286 U. S. 6,
286 U. S. 33;
Christoffel v. United States, 338 U. S.
84. Even when a judicial controversy is presented, the
function of the courts is a narrow one.
"With the courts, the question is only one of power. The
constitution empowers each house to determine its rules of
proceedings. It may not, by its rules, ignore constitutional
restraints or violate fundamental rights, and there should be a
reasonable
Page 374 U. S. 144
relation between the mode or method of proceeding established by
the rule and the result which is sought to be attained. But, within
these limitations, all matters of method are open to the
determination of the house, and it is no impeachment of the rule to
say that some other way would be better, more accurate or even more
just."
United States v. Ballin, supra, at
144 U. S. 5;
United States v. Smith, supra.
The Committee, pursuant to enabling resolutions of the House of
Representatives in exercise of that rulemaking power, promulgated
its rules of procedure, number IV-A of which is in issue here:
"IV -- Executive and Public Hearings:"
"A --
Executive:"
"(1) If a majority of the Committee or Subcommittee, duly
appointed as provided by the rules of the House of Representatives,
believes that the interrogation of a witness in a public hearing
might endanger national security or unjustly injure his reputation,
or the reputation of other individuals, the Committee shall
interrogate such witness in an Executive Session for the purpose of
determining the necessity or advisability of conducting such
interrogation thereafter in a public hearing."
"(2) Attendance at Executive Sessions shall be limited to
Members of the Committee, its staff, and other persons whose
presence is requested or consented to by the Committee."
"(3) All testimony taken in Executive Sessions shall be kept
secret, and shall not be released or used in public sessions
without the approval of a majority of the Committee."
Petitioner's claim is that, in deciding to hold a public hearing
in his case rather than to take his testimony in executive session,
the Committee failed to give him the
Page 374 U. S. 145
full benefit of the rule because it did not consider whether
"interrogation of a witness in a public hearing might . . .
unjustly injure his reputation," and instead considered only injury
to the reputation of other individuals. I find this contention
wholly without substance.
My understanding of the testimony in trial court is that, when a
witness before the Committee may implicate third persons about whom
the Committee does not have reliable information, an executive
session is held. In terms of Rule IV-A, an executive session is
afforded in these circumstances because an open hearing "might . .
. unjustly injure . . . the reputation of other individuals." It is
otherwise, and a closed session is not required, when the Committee
has adequate and reliable information about the other individuals
the witness may mention, for their reputation would not then be
"unjustly injured" by revealing verified information in a public
session.
The same considerations apply to the witness himself.
"Certainly," as Mr. Tavenner testified, the rule operates for the
benefit of the party testifying.
See Opinion of the Court,
ante, p. 116,
n 5.
According to both Mr. Tavenner and Mr. Walter, Yellin was denied an
executive session under the rule because he was a known Communist,
and the Committee had sworn testimony to this effect. The Committee
believed the information furnished by its investigators about
Yellin to be reliable. Measured against the plain terms of Rule
IV-A, these facts did not call for a closed session. There was
sworn testimony or other proof to back up the questions to be
asked. There would be no "unjust injury" to the reputation of the
witness Yellin. Publicly interrogating a witness if the Committee's
foundation for its questions rests only upon suspicion or rumor
falls within the area of unjust injury to reputation. But public
revelation of the truth does not.
The foregoing appears to me to be the construction which the
Committee placed upon its own rules, and, as so
Page 374 U. S. 146
construed, it was applied here. It is true that, in stating
generally the considerations entering into the holding of an
executive session, Mr. Walter said that private hearings are
"usually" granted when third persons may be mentioned against whom
there is no sworn testimony, and that he did not know of any other
considerations. But this general remark is, at best, ambiguous, and
is supplemented by his previous statements concerning the
Committee's decision to hold a public hearing in petitioner's own
case. That decision, according to his testimony, plainly was based
upon the Committee's appraisal of its information about petitioner.
Yellin was not denied an executive session because there was no
indication of injury to third persons. The considerations
underlying the denial were peculiar to Yellin himself. In the
Committee's view, its information about him was reliable and
adequate, his reputation would not be unjustly injured, and he was
therefore not entitled to a closed session. The Committee did not,
as petitioner urges, fail to consider any element of its rule when
it determined to interrogate him in a public hearing.
While the testimony is reasonably clear as to the Committee's
construction and application of its own rule, if there were any
doubt about the matter, it is not our place to resolve every doubt
against the Committee.
"The presumption in favor of regularity, which applies to the
proceedings of courts, cannot be denied to the proceedings of the
houses of Congress, when acting upon matters within their
constitutional authority."
Barry v. United States ex rel. Cunningham, 279 U.
S. 597,
279 U. S. 619.
See also McGrain v. Daugherty, 273 U.
S. 135,
273 U. S.
179-180;
In re Chapman, 166 U.
S. 661,
166 U. S. 670.
Cf. Tenney v. Brandhove, 341 U. S. 367,
341 U. S. 378.
Due regard for the legislative branch of the Government requires a
considerably clearer showing than what is offered here that the
long-time Chairman of the Committee did not know his own rules when
he
Page 374 U. S. 147
testified that the Committee had considered the request for an
executive session and determined that the rule did not require
it.
The Committee's construction of its own rules is entitled to
great weight.
United States v. Smith, 286 U. S.
6;
Christoffel v. United States, 338 U. S.
84.
"To place upon the standing rules of the [Congress] a
construction different from that adopted by the [Congress] . . . is
a serious and delicate exercise of judicial power."
United States v. Smith, supra, at
286 U. S. 48.
Here, the Committee, under its rule, does not deem it to be unjust
injury where the truth about the witness or a third person is
brought out in a public hearing in pursuance of a valid legislative
purpose. This reading of Rule IV-A is not bizarre, irrational, or
so out of keeping with history as to permit a court to ignore it
because it would prefer a different construction or an entirely
different rule. The House of Representatives has its own rule
concerning executive sessions, Rule XI(m), which, according to the
testimony at petitioner's trial and as contrasted with the rule of
the Committee, has been construed by the House to afford no
protection at all to the witness himself. Moreover, § 103 of
the Revised Statutes, as amended, 2 U.S.C. § 193 provides
that
"[n]o witness is privileged to refuse to testify to any fact . .
. upon the ground that his testimony to such fact . . . may tend to
disgrace him or otherwise render him infamous."
Whatever other problems may inhere in the rule of the Committee,
of the House or in the statute, the Committee's construction of its
own rule heralds no break with the tradition of the House or of
Congress in affording privacy to a witness when the hearing may be
a fishing expedition or an inquiry into mere rumor, but permitting
a public session when the matter to be brought out is both
pertinent to a legislative purpose and nothing but the unvarnished
truth.
"The Constitution commits to the [House] the
Page 374 U. S. 148
power to make its own rules, and it is not the function of the
Court to say that another rule would be better."
United States v. Smith, supra, at
286 U. S. 48.
Nor is there substance in petitioner's claim that the Committee
erroneously failed to act upon the telegraphic request. Under the
rule, all that is required is that the Committee consider whether
to hold the session in an executive hearing.
Cf. United States
ex rel. Accardi v. Shaughnessy, 347 U.
S. 260. Here, the Committee on its own motion, even
before the telegram was transmitted, had given full consideration
to whether petitioner should be questioned in private. Whatever
would have been the prejudice resulting from disregarding the
telegram and totally failing to consider whether the questioning
should be conducted in secret, there is no room for complaint on
this record, since the Committee had already deliberated on the
matter. Once it made its assessment, as it did here, it discharged
any obligation which its own rules imposed.
III
If "[t]estimonial compulsion is an intensely practical matter"
and "[e]very exemption from testifying or producing records thus
presupposes a very real interest to be protected,"
United
States v. Bryan, 339 U.S. at
339 U. S. 332,
much of this discussion is really beside the point. Petitioner was
convicted for refusing to answer four questions, each refusal
constituting a separate count in the indictment. He was found
guilty on all four counts, his sentences to run concurrently. His
conviction must stand if his refusal to answer any one of the
questions was unjustified.
Claassen v. United States,
142 U. S. 140,
142 U. S. 147;
Hirabayashi v. United States, 320 U. S.
81,
320 U. S. 85;
Barenblatt v. United States, 360 U.
S. 109,
360 U. S. 115.
The first question which petitioner refused to answer was: "Mr.
Yellin, where did you reside prior to September, 1957?" Petitioner
refused to respond because, to him, it was obvious
Page 374 U. S. 149
where "this line of questioning will probably lead" and,
expressly disclaiming Fifth Amendment protection, declined to
answer on First Amendment grounds.
Petitioner's conviction on Count 1 should stand quite
independently as against the claim to an executive session, for it
is difficult indeed to ascribe any reality to the view that
petitioner may not be compelled, in a public hearing held by a
legislative committee in pursuit of information pertinent to a
legislative purpose, to answer, or to refuse to answer, a question
about his residence prior to 1957 because of danger to his
reputation. Oversight of congressional committee procedures should
not be based upon such frivolous grounds.
In my view, petitioner's executive session argument is totally
without support, and therefore I dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
"Every person who having been summoned as a witness by the
authority of either House of Congress to give testimony or to
produce papers upon any matter under inquiry before either House,
or any joint committee established by a joint or concurrent
resolution of the two Houses of Congress, or any committee of
either House of Congress, willfully makes default, or who, having
appeared, refuses to answer any question pertinent to the question
under inquiry, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable
by a fine of not more than $1,000 nor less than $100 and
imprisonment in a common jail for not less than one month nor more
than twelve months."
[
Footnote 2/2]
"
Rule XI"
"
Powers and Duties of Committees"
"
* * * *"
"(q)(1) Committee on Un-American Activities."
"(A) Un-American activities."
"(2) The Committee on Un-American Activities, as a whole or by
subcommittee, is authorized to make from time to time
investigations of (i) the extent, character, and objects of
un-American propaganda activities in the United States, (ii) the
diffusion within the United States of subversive and un-American
propaganda that is instigated from foreign countries or of a
domestic origin and attacks the principle of the form of government
as guaranteed by our Constitution, and (iii) all other questions in
relation thereto that would aid Congress in any necessary remedial
legislation."
"The Committee on Un-American Activities shall report to the
House (or to the Clerk of the House if the House is not in session)
the results of any such investigation, together with such
recommendations as it deems advisable."
"For the purpose of any such investigation, the Committee on
Un-American Activities, or any subcommittee thereof, is authorized
to sit and act at such times and places within the United States,
whether or not the House is sitting, has recessed, or has
adjourned, to hold such hearings, to require the attendance of such
witnesses and the production of such books, papers, and documents,
and to take such testimony, as it deems necessary. Subpoenas may be
issued under the signature of the chairman of the committee or any
subcommittee, or by any member designated by any such chairman, and
may be served by any person designated by any such chairman or
member."
[
Footnote 2/3]
"
Rule XII"
"
Legislative Oversight by Standing Committees"
"Sec. 136. To assist the Congress in appraising the
administration of the laws and in developing such amendments or
related legislation as it may deem necessary, each standing
committee of the Senate and the House of Representatives shall
exercise continuous watchfulness of the execution by the
administrative agencies concerned of any laws, the subject matter
of which is within the jurisdiction of such committee, and, for
that purpose, shall study all pertinent reports and data submitted
to the Congress by the agencies in the executive branch of the
Government."
[
Footnote 2/4]
The Committee's resolution enumerated these areas of
inquiry:
"1. The extent, character, and objects of Communist infiltration
and Communist Party propaganda activities in basic industry in the
Gary, Indiana, area, the legislative purpose being to obtain
additional information for use by the Committee in its
consideration of Section 16 of H.R. 9352, relating to the proposed
amendment of Section 4 of the Communist Control Act of 1954,
prescribing a penalty for knowingly and willfully becoming or
remaining a member of the Communist Party with knowledge of the
purpose or objective thereof, and for the additional legislative
purpose of adding to the Committee's overall knowledge on the
subject, so that Congress may be kept informed and thus prepared to
enact remedial legislation in the national defense and for internal
security when and if the exigencies of the situation require
it."
"2. Execution by administrative agencies concerned of Public Law
637, of the 83d Congress, known as the 'Communist Control Act of
1954,' relating to the eligibility to exercise the rights and
privileges provided under the National Labor Relations Act of labor
organizations determined by the Subversive Activities Control Board
to be Communist-infiltrated organizations. The legislative purpose
is to assist Congress in appraising the administration of the
Communist Control Act of 1954, and to enact such amendments thereto
as the exigencies of the situation require."
"3. Any other matter within the jurisdiction of the Committee
which it or any subcommittee thereof, appointed to conduct this
hearing, may designate."
[
Footnote 2/5]
"Under the provisions of Public Law 601, 79th Congress (60 Stat.
812), the Congress has placed upon this committee certain
legislative and investigative duties and, in addition, the duty of
exercising continuous watchfulness over the execution of any laws
the subject matter of which is within the jurisdiction of this
committee. Accordingly, within the framework of this broad
jurisdiction and objectives, this subcommittee of the Committee on
Un-American Activities is here in Gary for the purpose of receiving
testimony concerning Communist techniques and tactics of
infiltration and the extent, character and objects of Communist
Party propaganda activities in basic industries. The importance of
this area of inquiry from the standpoint of national security,
cannot be overemphasized. Without this information, it would be
impossible for the committee to carry out its legislative duties as
required of it by the Congress."
"In response to the mandate from the Congress to keep constant
surveillance over existing security legislation, the committee is
constantly surveying the operation of the Internal Security Act of
1950, the Foreign Agents Registration Act, the various espionage
statutes, the Communist Control Act of 1954, and similar laws, for
the purpose of keeping Congress informed of the manner in which
laws are being administered and for the purpose of recommending any
needed legislative amendments. This mandate will be carried out at
this hearing."
"The committee recently formulated an Omnibus Security Bill,
H.R. 9352, which represents the most comprehensive effort ever made
to deal with all problems in the field of internal security. This
bill combines numerous proposals for empowering the Government to
combat the various aspects of the Communist conspiracy which are
not dealt with adequately in our present laws. It is the hope of
the committee that factual information obtained at this hearing
will be of assistance in the consideration of the numerous
provisions of this bill."
"The committee is especially desirous of obtaining additional
information for use in its consideration of Section 16 of H.R.
9352, relating to the proposed amendment of Section 4 of the
Communist Control Act of 1954, prescribing a penalty for knowingly
and willingly becoming or remaining a member of the Communist Party
with knowledge of the purpose or objective thereof."
[
Footnote 2/6]
"It has been testified here that colonization of young men in
the middle of their educational courses in industry was a
deep-seated plan of the Communist Party to strengthen itself within
basic industry. The chairman's opening statement indicated that the
activities of the Communist Party within basic industries was the
subject of inquiry here."
"
* * * *"
"The statement was made here of the practice of the Communist
Party in colonizing industry at Flint, Michigan; at the University
of Colorado, which is at Fort Collins, Colorado [
sic],
where you now reside; and other places."
"In order to understand the full tactics of the Communist Party
in its operations here in Gary, it is necessary the committee
understand fully the extent of such practices, the full purposes of
it, and the methods by which it is put into effect. That is the
connective reasoning of the committee in asking the question."
[
Footnote 2/7]
H.R. 2369, 86th Cong., 1st Sess., sponsored by Congressman
Walter, to redefine "organize" as used in the Smith Act; H.R. 3693,
86th Cong., 1st Sess., introduced by Congressman Scherer, to permit
the Federal Government to guard strategic defense facilities
against espionage, sabotage and other subversion; H.R. 9352, 85th
Cong., 1st Sess., an omnibus bill to amend the Internal Security
Act of 1950; H.R. 8121, 86th Cong., 2d Sess., a bill to provide a
security program for defense contractors and their employees.
[
Footnote 2/8]
"Q. [By Mr. Rabinowitz.] . . . [W]ill you state what information
you had, and what additional information you hoped to get?"
"
* * * *"
"A. [By Committee Counsel.] As I was stating, the Committee had
sworn testimony by two persons that Yellin was a member of the
Communist Party at Michigan University. We had evidence that he had
been transferred there from New York City; that he came from
Michigan University down here, down to Gary, Indiana, and there
became employed in the steel plants."
"
* * * *"
"We knew, from the statement made, by the information obtained
from Mr. LaFleur, that Mr. Yellin had been active in Communist
Party activities while employed by steel, the steel companies in
Gary, and he so testified later, and it is in the record here."
"Now, with that information relating to Mr. Yellin, we felt
certain that Mr. Yellin was in a position, if he would do so, to
tell this Committee a great many things regarding the plan of the
Communist Party to infiltrate the steel industry here, and to
building up the Communist Party from its grass roots level, and
just what the Communist Party plans were to make these bright young
men leaders who did this thing of colonizing. He could have told us
those things, from the position that he was in, if we were correct
about his position, had he been willing to do so."
"But not a single witness who has been identified -- who has
been identified -- as a colonizer in any of the places that you
have mentioned, that I can recall, has ever admitted it, or ever
testified that he had been a colonizer."
[
Footnote 2/9]
Petitioner also raises the following questions:
(1) Did the public interest in securing answers to the questions
which were the subject of the indictment outweigh the petitioner's
rights under the First Amendment and the public interest in the
protection of the free exchange of ideas?
(2) Was the investigation carried on by the Committee in
violation of the Constitution and particularly of the First
Amendment thereof?
(3) Did the trial court err in excluding certain proffered
evidence on the issue of the balancing of public rights and private
interests?
(4) Was the statute under which petitioner was convicted
unconstitutionally vague?
(5) Were the questions which formed the basis of Counts 2 and 4
too vague to support a valid indictment?
(6) In the circumstances here shown, was there any proper
legislative purpose in issuing a subpoena to petitioner?
[
Footnote 2/10]
The telegram read:
"Undersigned represents Edward Yellin and Nicholas Busic. On
their behalf I request executive session in lieu of open session.
Testimony needed for legislative purposes can be secured in
executive session without exposing witnesses to publicity. Victor
Rabinowitz."
[
Footnote 2/11]
"Mr. TAVENNER. Will you state your name please, sir."
"Mr. YELLIN. Edward Yellin."
"Mr. TAVENNER. Will counsel accompanying the witness please
identify himself for the record?"
"Mr. RABINOWITZ. Victor Rabinowitz, New York."
"Mr. TAVENNER. Where and when were you born, Mr. Yellin?"
"Mr. YELLIN. July 2, 1927, Bronx, New York."
"Mr. TAVENNER. Where do you now reside?"
"Mr. YELLIN. Fort Collins, Colorado."
"Mr. SCHERER. I cannot hear the witness."
"The CHAIRMAN. Where?"
"Mr. YELLIN. Fort Collins, Colorado."
"Mr. TAVENNER. How long have you lived at Fort Collins,
Colorado?"
"Mr. YELLIN. Since just about September of '57."
"Mr. TAVENNER. '50?"
"Mr. YELLIN. September, '57."
"Mr. TAVENNER. Where did you reside prior to --"
"Mr. RABINOWITZ. Mr. Counsel, I wonder whether it would be
possible to read into the record the exchange of telegrams between
myself and the committee in connection with the witness's
testimony. I would like to have it appear in the record."
"The CHAIRMAN. We will decide whether it will be made a part of
the record when the executive session is held. Go ahead."
"Mr. RABINOWITZ. Mr. Chairman, I sent the telegrams because I
wanted them to appear. I do not care whether they appear publicly
or not. I do want it to appear that that exchange of telegrams
occurred. I did not do it just to increase the revenue of the
telegram company."
"The CHAIRMAN. Well, whatever the reason was, whether it has
been stated or otherwise, it will be considered in executive
session."
"Mr. RABINOWITZ. May I state --"
"The CHAIRMAN. Do not bother. You know the privileges given you
by this committee. You have appeared before it often enough. You
know as well as anybody."
"Go ahead, Mr. Tavenner."
[
Footnote 2/12]
"Mr. TAVENNER. Mr. Yellin, where did you reside prior to
September, 1957?"
"(The witness conferred with his counsel.)"
"Mr. YELLIN. Mr. Tavenner, is that right?"
"Mr. TAVENNER. Yes."
"Mr. YELLIN. Mr. Tavenner, if I may, I would like to say just a
few words before I answer that question to state my grounds as to
what my position will be on answering questions."
"The CHAIRMAN. Just answer this question, not your grounds for
answering questions that have not been asked."
"Mr. YELLIN. Then let me say that I feel that this question and
this line of questioning will probably lead into certain areas of
my freedom of beliefs, and I feel that I would like to say just a
few words as to why I would not care to answer this question."
"The CHAIRMAN. It is not the case of whether you care to answer
or not. It is a question of do you or do you not answer the
question."
"(The witness conferred with his counsel.)"
"Mr. YELLIN. Mr. Congressman, let me put it this way then: I
will refuse to answer that question, and I would like the privilege
--"
"The CHAIRMAN. What is the question, Mr. Tavenner?"
"Mr. TAVENNER. The question was where the witness lived prior to
September, 1957."
"The CHAIRMAN. And you feel honestly that if you answer the
question of where you lived before September of last year, you
might be confronted with a criminal prosecution, is that it?"
"Mr. YELLIN. No. I didn't say that."
"The CHAIRMAN. You did not say that, but is that not what you
mean?"
"Mr. YELLIN. May I say what my objections are? If I can say what
they are --"
"The CHAIRMAN. Go ahead."
[
Footnote 2/13]
See also Loubriel v. United States, 9 F.2d 807,
808:
"The question is no less than whether courts must put up with
shifts and subterfuges in the place of truth and are powerless to
put an end to trifling. They would prove themselves incapable of
dealing with actualities if it were so, for there is no surer sign
of a feeble and fumbling law than timidity in penetrating the form
to the substance."